News Release

Washington, D.C.– U.S. Senators Mike Crapo (R-Idaho and Michael Bennet (D-Colorado) have secured a measure in the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Appropriations Bill to help prioritize wildfire mitigation efforts. The bill directs the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to develop a report detailing its efforts to mitigate wildfires and identify any funding obstacles for current mitigation programs.

Last week,Bennet and Crapourged the Subcommittee to push FEMA to use a greater share of its mitigation funding to prevent catastrophic wildfires. In the letter to the subcommittee’s chair and ranking member, Bennet and Crapo shared concerns about inadequate funding and recommended the report as a first step.

Specifically, the Crapo-Bennet measure in the bill says, “Over the last decade, wildfires have caused an average of over $1,000,000,000 in economic damages, killed over 150 Americans, and destroyed thousands of homes and other structures across the Nation. The six worst wildfire seasons in the past 50 years in the United States have all occurred since 2000. The Committee is concerned that mitigation efforts are not keeping pace with the growing risk. FEMA is directed to provide a report to the Committee no later than 120 days after the date of enactment of this act on the efforts being made to mitigate wildfires including FEMA technical assistance, information sharing, and grant expenditures for the last 5 years. FEMA should also identify any funding obstacles for wildfires in its current mitigation programs.”

A 2007 CBO study of FEMA’s Pre-Disaster Mitigation (PDM) program found that a very small share of the agency’s funding went to wildfires. Yet, in the same report, CBO concluded that for every dollar FEMA has spent through the PDM fund on wildfire mitigation, it has saved more than $5 in future disaster losses.

“Idahoans know firsthand how devastating fire season can be,” Crapo said. “Last year, more than 1,000 wild land fires burned more than 1.6 million acres in Idaho alone and we are already seeing a number of fires this season. I applaud the work of the Appropriations Committee and thank them for making wildfire mitigation a top priority. This bill will provide FEMA the resources to help our western states mitigate for the devastating wildfire season even before it starts.”

“Colorado and communities throughout the West are facing increasingly devastating wildfire seasons. They continue to grow in frequency and intensity,” Bennet said. “This bill sends a message to FEMA that wildfire mitigation programs are a priority and should be expanded in the future. They’ve proven to make a tangible difference and may help us prevent the tragic and unprecedented loss of life and staggering levels of destruction we have endured over the past decade.”

Throughout his career in Congress, Crapo has worked to reduce the risk and severity of large-scale wildfires. In the U.S. Senate in particular, Crapo helped enact legislation, including the Healthy Forest Restoration Act and the Collaborative Forest Landscape Restoration Act, that have provided land managers with more tools to counter unhealthy conditions in our nation’s forests and other lands to reduce the fire threat. Crapo recently joined a bipartisan group of senators in urging President Obama not to reduce timber sales on Forest Service lands, as he called for in his 2014 budget. The letter stressed the serious consequences reductions could have on communities across the nation and the need for increased timber harvests to help mitigate raging wildfires and help create jobs in our forests.